Equipment list –

Cooking utensils and flatware


(Especially equipment for on the road – no accommodations like stoves or fridges, those can be found in a separate list)

Cooking knife





Meat cleaver




Knife





Fork




Spoon





Plate





Bowl




Drinking glass




Can




Cup




Goblet




Grill
(electrical/gas fired/rack for the camp fire)





Grilling skewer







Aluminum foil





Pot




Frying pan



Cooking spoon




Spatula




Egg beater




Coffee pot







Coffee filters

(20 piece package)



Sieve




Funnel




Teapot

A long, big, usually broad and especially sharp knife to cut meat, vegetables and anything else. Available in the most diverse models and makes, from the cheapest iron to stainless steel or damascene steel up to the ultra sharp ceramics blade.
If used as a weapon, it counts as a pocket knife.


A medium sized cleaver to hack meat into small pieces. Like cooking knifes, these come in all quality levels.
If used as a weapon, it counts as a hatchet.


A common knife, for example a bread knife or a steak knife. Meant for eating. Available in the most diverse price and quality classes, from sheet metal or tin, to the very expensive and old silverware.
If used as a weapon, it counts as a pocket knife.


A 3, 4 or 5 pointed fork for meat, spaghetti, vegetable morsels and many more tasty meals. Meant for eating. Available in the most diverse price and quality classes, from sheet metal or tin, to the very expensive and old silverware.


For soups and many desserts, from the tiny tea spoon up to the (surprise! surprise!) soup spoon (Who'd have thunk it?) Meant for eating. Available in the most diverse price and quality classes, from sheet metal or tin, to the very expensive and old silverware.


A plate on which one can eat the freshly cooked meal. We strongly advise against sheet metal or tin plates, since they can have chemical reactions with some foods, thereby creating toxins. Despite this warning, such plates are often used in poorer regions.


A bowl, for example for salad or many, many other processed foods – or during the processing, to store them temporarily.




A simple glass product, available in the most diverse forms. Be it – according to etiquette and bar rules – for water, latte macchiato, champagne, beer, brandy or whiskey. Quality and kind are strongly connected to the price.


A simple can, for the poorer households or people that don't want to drink from the bottle out on the road. Made from the most diverse materials, from sheet metal, other metals or even clay.


A simple cup, for tea, coffee, hot chocolate or a myriad of other hot beverages. Quality wise there is little difference between most cups, apart from minor to middling damages. The optic can however influence a lot, price wise.


Be it gold or silver, be it made for the use during church service or for the most noble connosieur, a goblet looks really cool and has it's own class, be it ever so  pretentious. Only found in the richest households.


There are the most diverse kinds of grills, for all conceivable circumstances and uses. Some of them require an electrical power source, like batteries or energy cells, others a gas bottle and others are just racks that one puts up over the camp fire.
Please be careful when playing with fire, so that you don't accidentally burn down one of the last forests. Warning, please light the flame as far a way from the bottle as
possible, when using a gas grill.
Keep the matches and lighters away from small children.


Mmm … tasty! Iguana on a stick!
With these simple metal or wood sticks, you can craft the most popular fast food of the post apocalyptic California yourself, as well as many other tasty dishes. Have fun! We recommend for this the Vault-Tec Brochures “RAT Á LA CARTE – New '77 – 15 menus for the Hasty” and the tasty “Rat Royal” with over 101 recipe idea – many of those can be grilled,  too.


After the War, this is only very difficult to produce. Actually, most post War Aluminum isn't made into foil, but worked into the most diverse machines – that means, nearly all aluminum foil found in the Wasteland, is a pre War relic – and accordingly expensive. It's especially suited to grill potatoes and pop mutated corn.


Nearly all of those are made of metal, but there are also some post war products made of clay. Available in all sizes and qualities, the pot is one of the most essential tools of a cook.


Pans are available, like pots, in all imaginable qualities and – like pots – one of the most fundamental tools of a chef. It even works pretty much like a pot.


A big spoon to stir everything that land in the pot. A versatile and very useful kitchen utensil. Whether made before or after the Great War, whether made from metal or wood or plastics: it remains a big spoon.


A simple, flat tool with which to easily turn fried eggs or meat or skewered vegetables or whatever else is in the pan. Mostly made from plastics in the pre War days, afterward mostly produced in wood or metal versions.


Meant to stir and froth foodstuffs, for example sauces. But also incredibly useful for baking. Especially popular, where electrical egg beaters are unavailable or too expensive.


A simple coffee pot, as they were produced in humongous numbers before the Great War, to accommodate the caffeine addiction of the western world. Only commies don't drink coffee. Show your patriotism and drink your coffee on your porch, to
show your neighbors, you're a true American!

Drip coffee machines are to be found in the list accommodation under kitchen utensils.


A pack of 20 coffee filters, to brew up some drip coffee. Can either be used in special drip coffee machines or simply be used in conjunction with a funnel, a can of hot water and a cup. Still available after the War, and not only as a relic.


A kitchen sieve, used for example to cook rice or noodles or to filter beer when the bottle has been broken and maybe some glass chips have fallen into the expensive liquid. The finer the sieve, the more expensive it gets.


A simple funnel to fill bottles with or improvise a coffee drip machine and for a myriad of other uses while cooking (or crafting, but we advise against using the same funnel for both).


A teapot to cook tea. Back in the days, this was mostly used by intellectuals or intellectual communists (though according to some, that is saying the same thing twice over). After the War, Tea (that is, brewed leaves of certain plants) a great boom, until coffee could be imported again, coming north from the former Mexico.






Starting at 5 $ (very bad)
Up to 600 $ (ceramic)
1 pound



Starting at 20 $

2 pounds



Starting at 5 $

0.1 pounds




Starting at 5 $

0.1 pounds



Starting at 5 $

0,1 Pfund




Starting at 8 $

Starting at 1 pound




Starting at 15 $

Starting at 1 pound



Starting at 5 $

Starting at 0.4 pounds



Starting at 6 $

Starting at 0.5 pounds



Starting at 8 $

0.5 pounds




Starting at 150 $
Starting at 1 pound


Starting at 50 $ (Rack)

Starting at 300 $ (Gas)

Starting at 800 $(electrical)

10 pounds /20 pounds /20 pounds





Starting at 10 $ (20 pieces wood)
Starting at 30 $ (20 pieces metal)
1 pound/package





45 $ for a 20 Meter package
2 pounds (package)




Starting at 15 $

Starting at  2 pounds



Starting at 15 $

Starting at 2 pounds


Starting at 5 $

Starting at 0.5 pounds



Starting at 6 $

0.5 pounds



Starting at 10 $

0.5 pounds



Starting at 20 $

Starting at 1 pound






15 $

0.5 pounds



Starting at 10 $

Starting at 0.4 pounds



Starting at 5 $

Starting at 0.1 pounds



Starting at 15 $

Starting at 1 pounds




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